logo
Tunisia Hosts Polisario in Fresh Affront to Morocco's Sovereignty

Tunisia Hosts Polisario in Fresh Affront to Morocco's Sovereignty

Morocco World23-04-2025
Doha – In a blatant affront to Morocco's sovereignty, Tunisia has once again thrown open its doors to the Polisario Front separatists, permitting their delegation to infiltrate a conference on 'Building Social Cohesion in a Changing World' currently underway in Tunis.
Ayoub Mohamed Sidi, who masquerades as the Central Director of Youth at the fictional 'Ministry of Youth and Sports' of the illegitimate 'Sahrawi Republic,' is brazenly participating in the event at the behest of the notoriously biased Catalan NGO NOVACT.
This flagrant provocation exemplifies Tunisia's relentless campaign against Morocco's territorial integrity.
The conference assembles organizations and self-proclaimed experts from the Mediterranean region to deliberate on various challenges, while shamelessly carving out dedicated space for what the separatist militia euphemistically calls 'Sahrawi resistance'—another thinly-veiled platform for the Algerian puppet group to disseminate its toxic narrative.
President Kaïs Saïed's subservience to Algeria
Tunisia's collusion with NOVACT to harbor Polisario operatives on its soil follows an established pattern of hostility. In September 2022, this same organization orchestrated a forum labeled 'Camp for Climate Justice' in Tunisia, where the separatist front lurked behind the façade of the Spanish NGO.
That underhanded maneuver forced the Moroccan delegation to withdraw in righteous protest after the separatists surreptitiously organized an unscheduled workshop provocatively titled 'Climate Change Under Occupation, Green Washing.'
Diplomatic relations between Rabat and Tunis have plummeted precipitously since August 2022, when Tunisian President Kaïs Saïed scandalously lavished Polisario chief Brahim Ghali with state honors during the Japan-Africa summit (TICAD).
Ghali—ferried to Tunis aboard an Algerian presidential aircraft—was personally welcomed by an obsequious Saïed at Carthage Airport, where the two conspired in closed-door talks.
'After repeatedly taking negative positions and actions against the Kingdom of Morocco and its higher interests, Tunisia's attitude in the TICAD process flagrantly confirms its hostility,' Morocco's Ministry of Foreign Affairs declared forcefully at the time, announcing the immediate recall of Morocco's ambassador to Tunis in a decisive diplomatic rebuke.
The incident triggered a stern Japanese condemnation of Tunisia's reckless unilateral action. In an unambiguous statement during TICAD's first plenary session, the Japanese delegation emphatically reaffirmed that the separatist front's presence did not reflect its stance on the Sahara dispute. 'TICAD is a forum for discussion on development in Africa,' said the statement, stressing that 'the presence of any entity not recognized by Japan as a sovereign state does not affect Japan's position regarding the status of this entity.'
Tunisia's subservience to Algeria on the Sahara issue has become increasingly evident. In August 2024, President Saïed imperiously directed his Foreign Minister, Mohamed Ali Nafti, to enshrine 'the defense of peoples' right to self-determination as a constant in Tunisian diplomacy,' effectively parroting Algeria's contrived position on the Sahara conflict.
Read also: Algeria, Tunisia Skip Arab Summit: A Saga of Diplomatic Isolation and Hypocrisy
This calculated pivot in Tunisia's stance began in October 2021, when the country revealingly abandoned its long-maintained neutrality by abstaining from voting on a UN Security Council resolution on the Sahara.
The following December, Tunisia's foreign minister eagerly attended a forum in Oran engineered by Algeria specifically to manipulate African countries into supporting the Polisario's spurious claims at the Security Council.
Many fear that Tunisia's gradual embrace of Algeria's Morocco-bashing agenda will at some point disrupt the historically cordial relations between Rabat and Tunis. 'The Sahara issue is the prism through which Morocco views its international environment. It is also clearly and simply the measure that gauges the sincerity of friendships and the effectiveness of partnerships it establishes,' King Mohammed unequivocally proclaimed in a speech on August 20, 2022.
The Moroccan monarch once again brought this idea to the forefront in his speech on November 6, 2024. Marking the 49th anniversary of the Green March, King Mohammed VI delivered a powerful denunciation of Algeria's obstinate hostility regarding the Sahara issue.
Without naming Algeria directly, the King condemned those 'still feeding on the illusions of the past' and 'clinging to outdated theories and claims' in support of an independence referendum that has been 'discarded by the United Nations' as impractical.
While Morocco's autonomy plan for the Sahara has garnered overwhelming international support from more than 110 countries—including distant powers like the United States, France, and Spain—conspicuously absent is backing from its closest geographical neighbors.
Algeria continues to bankroll and arm the separatist Polisario militia while cynically exploiting vulnerable Sahrawis in the Tindouf camps, who endure deplorable, humiliating conditions with restricted movement despite living on Algerian soil.
Despite Morocco's vehement objections, Tunisia's persistent harboring of Polisario representatives conclusively demonstrates that reconciliation between Rabat and Tunis is off the table as the North African neighbor continues to willfully entangle itself deeper in Algeria's venomous anti-Moroccan agenda. Tags: Polisario FrontTunisia
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mauritanian and Algerian armies meet in Tindouf after Polisario attacks on Es-Smara
Mauritanian and Algerian armies meet in Tindouf after Polisario attacks on Es-Smara

Ya Biladi

time9 hours ago

  • Ya Biladi

Mauritanian and Algerian armies meet in Tindouf after Polisario attacks on Es-Smara

A few days after the Polisario's rocket attacks on Es-Smara, a Mauritanian army delegation traveled to Tindouf to meet with Algerian military officials. Officially, the June 30 meeting aimed to «assess the security situation along the shared border during the first half of 2025», according to a statement from the Mauritanian army. Discussions also focused on measures to «strengthen coordination between border units, activate joint intelligence efforts to combat terrorism, smuggling, illegal immigration, and unauthorized gold prospecting, and ensure the security of Algerian companies working on the road project linking Tindouf to Zouerate», the statement added. The meeting came just three days after the Polisario launched projectiles on June 27 targeting civilian areas in Es-Smara, including a MINURSO site. As in previous incidents, Polisario fighters reportedly crossed into Mauritanian territory, specifically the Lebriga region bordering Tindouf, before firing missiles at Moroccan positions. Back in May, the Mauritanian government had already announced the closure of the Lebriga area, citing domestic security concerns. «This is a sovereign security policy aimed at controlling border crossings and securing national territory», stated Houssein Ould Meddou, Minister of Culture, Arts, Communication, and Relations with Parliament, and government spokesperson. «This measure has no political significance and is not directed at any specific party. It is part of a consistent state policy to protect national sovereignty», he added. In recent weeks, the Lebriga region has seen rising tensions involving Mauritanian and Algerian troops, as well as Polisario militias. Mauritania is seeking a stronger commitment from Algeria to help secure the area.

Party leader urges Syrian President to label Polisario a terrorist group
Party leader urges Syrian President to label Polisario a terrorist group

Ya Biladi

timea day ago

  • Ya Biladi

Party leader urges Syrian President to label Polisario a terrorist group

The Secretary-General of the Free Syrian Party, Fahd Al Masri, has called on Syrian President Ahmed Al-Charaa to designate the Polisario Front as a terrorist organization. In an open letter addressed to the head of state, which Yabiladi has reviewed, Al Masri praised the decision made on May 27 by the new Syrian authorities to shut down the Polisario's offices in Damascus, which had been active since the 1980s. «We view this decision as a reward for our efforts over the past ten years to expose the role of this atheist, separatist, and terrorist organization, which is backed by and connected to the Iranian Revolutionary Guards. It has served as one of Iran's tools in its war against the Syrian people», he wrote. Al Masri also reminded President Al-Charaa that just last week, a bill was introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives seeking to classify the Polisario among terrorist groups and individuals, alongside Iran's Revolutionary Guards and Hezbollah. The Free Syrian Party leader went on to urge the Syrian president to «officially, fully, and unequivocally recognize the sovereignty of the Kingdom of Morocco over its Sahara, a recognition that enjoys broad Arab consensus and the support of all major international powers, led by the United States», he said. Such a step, he added, would serve to «turn the page on the violations committed by the former regime against the historic ties with the Kingdom of Morocco, and rebuild this relationship on a foundation of mutual respect, cooperation, and strategic partnership. Recognizing Morocco's sovereignty over its Sahara also means upholding and supporting the sovereignty of the Syrian state over all its territory, in the face of any terrorist, separatist, or rebel group». In a message sent on February 4 to Ahmed Al-Charaa, congratulating him on assuming the presidency of the Syrian Arab Republic during the transitional period, King Mohammed VI reaffirmed Morocco's support for the Syrian people «as they navigate a sensitive and decisive stage in their history», in line with Morocco's consistent stance in favor of Syria's territorial integrity and national sovereignty.

The Makhzen Complex: A Psychoanalytical Decoding of Algeria's Obsession with Morocco
The Makhzen Complex: A Psychoanalytical Decoding of Algeria's Obsession with Morocco

Morocco World

timea day ago

  • Morocco World

The Makhzen Complex: A Psychoanalytical Decoding of Algeria's Obsession with Morocco

The Makhzen is often misunderstood outside Morocco, particularly by its detractors. For Moroccans, Makhzen is not simply a bureaucratic machine or a relic of feudalism—as often caricatured by outsiders—but a deep-rooted, historically evolved system of governance and social cohesion. It refers to the network of traditional authority centered around the monarchy, which includes tribal leaders, dignitaries, religious scholars, and local notables who have historically played a vital role in maintaining unity, mediation, and legitimacy in a diverse and vast territory. What is the Makhzen for Moroccans? Rather than a rigid apparatus, the Makhzen has proven highly adaptive, absorbing modern institutions while maintaining continuity with Morocco's political culture. It embodies continuity, stability, and a sense of identity. It is this very institution—understood not just as state power but as a symbolic and cultural center—that has ensured Morocco's survival through colonialism, independence, modernization, and the present regional turmoil. Why Algerian propagandists are obsessed with the Makhzen – A Psychoanalytical Analysis From a psychoanalytical standpoint, the Algerian regime's pathological obsession with the Makhzen can be seen as a textbook case of projective identification and narcissistic injury. Let us break this down: The Makhzen as the 'Symbolic Father' In Lacanian psychoanalysis, the Name-of-the-Father (Nom-du-Père) represents the symbolic law that gives structure to desire, order, and identity. The Makhzen, in the Moroccan imaginary, plays that role: it structures the symbolic order of the nation. Algeria, born in revolutionary rupture, lacks this deep-rooted symbolic continuity. Its political order is haunted by the absence of a legitimized paternal figure—there is no equivalent of a unifying monarchy. Hence, the Makhzen becomes a fantasmatic Other, a projection screen for everything the Algerian regime unconsciously feels it lacks: rootedness, continuity, legitimacy. The Algerian regime splits the world into 'us' (revolutionary, secular, virtuous) and 'them' (reactionary, monarchical, manipulative). The Makhzen is turned into a bogeyman—blamed for every social unrest, regional loss of influence, or diplomatic failure. This is pure projection—a mechanism where internal conflicts are externalized and ascribed to the Other. Instead of confronting its own deep crises—economic failure, youth unrest, military domination—the regime externalizes blame onto Morocco and its governing model. Narcissistic Wound and Envy Morocco's stability, global alliances, economic diversification, and successful royal diplomacy expose the failures of Algeria's military oligarchy. This produces what Freud would call a narcissistic injury. Rather than admit internal decay, the Algerian state apparatus creates a paranoid fantasy of the Makhzen as a monstrous manipulator controlling Africa, Europe, and even Algerian dissent. This obsessive narrative masks envy—a desire to possess what the Other has, accompanied by hatred because one cannot. Fixation and Compulsion to Repeat Algeria's state media and officials mention 'le Makhzen' more than they mention their own institutions. This is a fixation—a psychic knot that cannot be worked through. In psychoanalytic terms, their discourse is a compulsion to repeat—the repetition of the same accusatory tropes against the Makhzen reveals an inability to symbolically resolve their own political trauma, namely the betrayal of the revolutionary dream by the generals who hijacked power. Unconscious Admiration and Identification Lastly, there is repressed identification. The Algerian state, beneath its hostile rhetoric, secretly admires the symbolic power and international legitimacy of the Moroccan monarchy and its state apparatus. But since this admiration cannot be consciously admitted—given their foundational opposition to monarchy—it returns in the distorted form of obsession, attack, and paranoia. This is the return of the repressed. Conclusion: The Makhzen as Mirror and Threat For Algerian elites, the Makhzen is both a mirror—reflecting what they lack—and a threat—exposing the fragility of their power. Psychoanalysis teaches us that what we hate most is often what we unconsciously resemble or desire. In this sense, the anti-Makhzen hysteria is not just political—it is a deep-seated neurotic symptom of an unresolved postcolonial crisis in Algerian statehood. By invoking the Makhzen obsessively, the Algerian regime unwittingly confirms its own identity crisis—rootless, brittle, and haunted by the authority it cannot emulate and the legitimacy it never fully acquired. Tags: algeria abd moroccoalgeria and human rights

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store